Example sentences of "here [prep] the [num ord] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 They were the main large size money circulating here during the 17th century .
2 ‘ Not that that 's much of a road to speak of , ’ the Brigadier went on , But the family has n't lived there since before the war-there were German and then English soldiers billeted here during the second war … ’
3 No records remain as to who lived here through the seventeenth century , when during the Civil War a bloody battle took place on the Manor 's doorstep .
4 It is also important to differentiate here between the first flight of the day and subsequent flights .
5 Welcome to Molyneux , Headley , Brian Horton 's with me , the United manager because he was brought up in this part of the world , must be very proud of what you brought up here for the second half Brian , but so disappointed after that first half showing .
6 These efforts have proved — regrettably — to be unsuccessful , and the essay is therefore printed here for the first time without its owner 's permission .
7 Here for the first time he found something of what the pilgrim on his bicycle had sought : ‘ the sense of mystery , and awe , and of another world at once far and near … a sense that we were vividly in the presence of the passion of Jesus and also vividly near to heaven , to which the passion mysteriously belonged , so as to be brought from the past to the present ’ .
8 At about this time , the BBC offered him a World Service job based in London and , at the age of 30 , he came here for the first time .
9 ‘ I became really sick here for the first time and did n't know what was going on , ’ he recalls .
10 Now here for the first time she was fighting her own battle .
11 Here for the first time the actual shape of the Council was outlined .
12 New national research , revealed here for the first time , shows that less than one in five local authorities across the UK have internal guidelines for social workers on dealing with elder abuse .
13 But there are twelve fewer non-North American galleries this year , and forty-two dealers nearly twenty-five per cent of the fair are here for the first time .
14 As Reinhard Drifte has observed , ‘ Here for the first time , the idea of a Japan-US security treaty emerges along lines of the actual treaty of 1951 . ’
15 Then he went on — ‘ Here for the first time I talked about our country with a white Rhodesian .
16 Here for the first time a Celtic writer proclaimed the superiority of British early breakfast over Latin siesta .
17 Timmy , 34 , and his Australian wife Lynda proudly show off five -week-old William Theodore Mallett here for the first time .
18 ‘ It is interesting when I bring someone like Rodney Marsh here for the first time to see his reaction .
19 The additional list of tempos by Czerny for Mozart quartets and quintets in table 1 , which appears here for the first time , also shows a similarly wide range of minuet tempos , from slow to fast ( for quartets and quintets , dotted minim = 44–84 ; together with the list of tempos by Czerny and Hummel for the Mozart symphonies , dotted minim = 42–88 see table 2 of my 1988 Early music article ) .
20 Tony is er Professor of Economics at Cambridge and is a world renowned luminary in economic circles and er he 's , he 's here for the next week as a special professor and er is giving a number of lectures er most of which are open to , to all , to all students and he is a very famous economist , very clever chap you know if you can get to see him I , I 'd reco I 'd recommend it erm presuma there may be a sort of programme of his visit stuck up on the student notice boards erm , if there is n't er he 's giving a , a lecture tomorrow two o'clock in B seventy four and that 's , that 's if , he is going to be talking to the M A students er taking Economic Development and Policy Analysis and his topic there is comparing income inequality and poverty in Europe erm so if you , you know , if you are free tomorrow at two it just might be interesting to go along to , feel free to go to B seventy four tomorrow at two o'clock .
21 If he does , does he have any retraining plans in mind for those of his hon. Friends who will not be here after the next election ?
22 Nuremberg will forever be associated with the trials held here after the last war , which is a shame .
23 Thousands of Poles settled here after the last war , but they 've worked hard over the years to keep in touch with their cultural roots .
24 They get mad here after the last wisp of hay — I 've seen old women down on their knees , gleaning it with their fingers . ’
25 And what they did was they put a tube from here into the next bit of the stomach , that comes round from underneath there , put a tube across there
26 From the early 1200s William de Mouthecombe was lord of the manor , and his descendants continued to live here until the fifteenth century , when Margerie Mouthecombe , the last of the line , married Richard Sacheville , a very nasty man who in 1431 caused his neighbours , including Foretescues , Combes , Prideaux and Treebys , to attack Mothecombe with ‘ swerdis and bokelers , bowesy-bente , arrewes and daggers …
27 Out of his manors , William chose to reside at Hammoon , and his descendants certainly lived here until the seventeenth century .
28 There was a temple here from the seventh century , but it was dedicated to Zeus 's consort Hera , though in the early sixth-century reconstruction which endured throughout antiquity his primitive image , helmeted , stood beside hers enthroned ( above , p. 22 ) .
29 We really felt at home here from the first time we came .
30 Pupils here in the fifth year are generally thought to be dross .
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